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MONDAY

June 27, 2011 Provo, Utah universe.byu.edu

Serving the Brigham Young University Community

Romney visits Salt Lake


B y M AT T H O p K I N S
Mitt Romney met with community members and local business people at Hires Big H in Salt Lake City on Friday to discuss their concerns with the current administration. Romney was quick to give them assurances that if he was elected, things would be different. There are very few people in business today who think the government is on their side, Romney said. Im still a business guy, and I love business because business creates good jobs for good

here are very few people in business today who think the government is on their side.
Repulbican presidential candidate
Americans, and thats what Ill ght for. Although there were policemen walking around the premises and workers making preparations for the rally outside the popular burger restaurant a couple hours before Romneys appearance, not everyone knew the candidate

Mitt Romney

Photo by Luke Hansen

would be speaking at that very spot a short time later. We had no idea that he would be coming, to be honest, said Brady Johnson, 31, from Dallas. We were just meeting up for lunch and found out he was going to be here. Scott Halle, a sophomore studying psychology at BYU and a Jon Huntsman Jr. supporter, came to nd out more about Romney. I want to nd out why I should vote for Romney over Huntsman, Halle said. Both are fantastic and have business experience. I want to know what Romney has that Huntsman doesnt. See ROMNEY on Page 3

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney speaks to a crowd in Salt Lake City.

Jazz give back

New app released for LDS books


By JuSTIN SMITH
Joining the strength of 450,000 Apple apps, including the Gospel Library published by the LDS Church, Deseret Book has recently released an app for mobile devices. More than 20,000 smartphone users have downloaded the free Gospel Library giving them digital versions of LDS scriptures, manuals, magazines, hymns and more than 1,500 titles published by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The new Deseret Book app hopes to give users a similar experience. The recently released Deseret Bookshelf has more than 1,500 etitles available, offering users the worlds largest selection of LDS e-books for use on iPad, iPhone or iPod. It is the first mobile app launched by Deseret Book Company, which plans to expand to Android later this summer. The free application gives users access to the scriptures, LDS study materials and eight popular eBooks published by Deseret Book. Other than the eight gratuitous eBooks which are pending release, titles must be purchased digitally through Deseret Book. The Deseret Bookshelf app allows users to surf, view and purchase digital titles offered by Deseret Book. Although Deseret Book offers 1,200 books for Kindle, items purchased using the Bookshelf can only be accessed using the Bookshelf app. Users must create an account with Deseret Book before the app can be accessed. See APP on Page 3

Photo by Stephanie Rhodes

2011 Utah Jazz draft pick Enes Kanter gives instruction on defense to local youth at a basketball clinic in Salt Lake City on Saturday morning.

Utah rookies, coaching staff hold basketball clinic for local youth
By BROOKE WARD
Standing at almost seven feet tall, the Utah Jazzs new center is pretty easy to spot in a crowd. Even crouched in a deep defensive stance, 19-year-old Enes Kanter of Turkey towered over the admiring eyes of those who emulated his posture and shifting movement across the gym floor at the Zions Bank Basketball Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday morning. Kanter, along with fellow lottery pick and former University of Colorado Buffalo Alec Burks, joined the Jazz coaching staff in hosting a private basketball clinic for local youth from the Big Brothers Big Sisters of Utah and the Boys and Girls Club of South Valley. After a brief warmup, head coach Tyrone Corbin, assistant coaches Scott Layden and Jeff Hornacek and Director of Basketball Operations Richard Smith helped Kanter and Burks coach the participants in a rotation of the basketball essentials dribbling, shooting, passing and defense. For two sisters, Carla and Luisa Baez, this was the highlight of their day. Learning from the coaches was awesome because theyre the ones who teach the Jazz to do everything and keep them where they are, said 13-year-old Carla. See JAZZ on Page 3

grew up in the Boys and Girls Club in South Carolina. Its a great feeling to now ... have an opportunity to give back to that group.
Tyrone Corbin
Utah Jazz coach

Did Randy Newman get it right?


By MEGAN PEARSON
Short people got no reason to live. What if you were so short you couldnt reach the top shelf to grab milk at Wal-Mart? As shocking as Randy Newmans song is, some short people do feel like theyve got no reason to live. Anna Jones is a graduate from BYU. She is beautiful, smart, talented, witty and 4 feet 11 inches tall. I think people dont think of me as being a real person, Jones said. They think Im some sort of freak of nature thats not their equal or a subtype of human being thats not like them. Jones has a long list of disadvantages of being short. I cant reach anything, I cant touch the oor when I sit, and I think a lot of guys never considered me as someone they would date, she said. I think its denitely harder for boys to be short because girls can pass as cute and petite, but for guys, everybody notices. Im sure they are much more discriminated against. David Hogg, 26, a senior majoring in exercise science, said being short while growing up wasnt too bad at rst. I remember the rst day of seventh grade I got on the bus to go home and I walked to the back of the bus where all the eighth and ninth graders sat and all the older girls were like, Oh my gosh, hes so cute, Hogg said with a laugh. Because I was short I got to sit with all the hot eighth- and ninthgrade girls. But being short got harder as he aged. Hogg didnt start growing until he was 16 years old. Until then he said he was bullied, pushed and teased. In eighth grade when I was 14, I was 4-foot-8 super short and I would get picked on a lot because I couldnt do anything about it, Hogg said. See SHORT on Page 3

Photo by Luke Hansen

Tall people succeed substantially more than their shorter counterparts in business, according to some studies.

2 The Daily Universe, Monday, June 27, 2011

BRIEFING
The world is our campus

Associated Press

Associated Press

President Barack Obama visits with soldiers from the 10th Mountain Division.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavezs post-surgery condition remains a secret.

Leeway on Afghan pullout


WASHINGTON (AP) In promising a U.S. military pullout from Afghanistan will begin in July, President Barack Obama is permitting his commanders to decide critical details, including the number of troops to depart rst and whether any of those will be combat forces, administration and military ofcials said Sunday. Providing that leeway is important to Army Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan.

Talks of armed struggle


CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) One of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavezs brothers said Sunday that backers of the hospitalized leftist leader should not rule out armed struggle in the future, though they prefer to maintain power at the ballot box. Adan Chavezs statement came as speculation mounted about the health of the president, who has been convalescing at an undisclosed location in Cuba after reportedly undergoing emergency surgery 16 days ago.

Associated Press

Police ofcers confront pro-government demonstrators as they attack democracy activists protesting for constitutional reforms recently unveiled by the kin Casablanca, Morocco, on Sunday.

YESTERDAY

WEATHER
TODAY

TUESDAY

Moroccan kings backers attack democracy activists


RABAT, Morocco (AP) Pro-government demonstrators in Morocco on Sunday attacked democracy activists protesting constitutional reforms recently unveiled by the king. Hundreds of youths pledging their support to King Mohammed VI scattered the pro-reform demonstrations taking place in a lower-income neighborhood in Rabat, hunting them through the narrow streets. After pro-democracy protests swept Morocco in February, the monarch unveiled a series of constitutional reforms Friday. Activists have said, however, they are insufcient and pledged to keep up their weekly demonstrations. An hour before the protest by the February 20 reform group was set to begin in the neighborhood of Taqqadum, the streets were lled with hundreds of young men riding in trucks accompanied by musicians calling for support for the king and his constitution. When they encountered the democracy activists attempting to begin their own protest, they pelted them with stones and eggs and attacked them.

80

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17 killed in suspected al-Qaida camp raid in Mali


NOUAKCHOTT, Mauritania (AP) A Mauritanian colonel who led a military raid last week on a suspected al-Qaida camp in the neighboring nation of Mali says that 17 people were killed during the operation. Col. Brahim Fall Ould Cheibani told a news conference Sunday that his men carried out the raid on Friday in the Wagadou region of Mali, a forested area bordering Mauritania. He says those killed included two Mauritanian soldiers and 15 members of the terrorist cell.

Partly Cloudy

Sunny

Sunny

57
Yesterday: 0.00

61
PRECIPITATION June 2011: 1.11

62
2011: 13.54

Sources: National Weather Service, BYU Geography Department

As water ebbs in Minot, thoughts of recovery


Associated Press
MINOT, N.D. The Souris River began a long, slow retreat in Minot on Sunday, leaving behind an arduous rebuilding job for more than 4,000 homeowners and hundreds of business operators, most of whom lack insurance to pay for it. Because they dont have coverage, federal assistance could amount to as little as a few thousand dollars apiece. Loan and grant programs will provide some help, as will an emergency relief fund just being set up. Still, there was at least one ray of hope: State lawmakers might be able to lend a hand, thanks in large part to North Dakotas oil boom, which generates $1 billion a year in tax money and has helped shield the state from the worst of the recession. Few people in Minot carried flood insurance only 375 homes in the ooded areas, said John Ashton, a spokesman for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Mike and Jodi Picard checked with neighbors when moving into their house less than two years ago and found that just one had ood insurance. The river was a quartermile away, and the prevailing opinion was that we were not in a oodplain anymore after a 1969 ood led to construction of levees and straightening of the river channel. Now you really kick yourself for not having it, said Jodi Picard. The Souris topped out Sunday nearly 2 feet below projections heading into the weekend, and it appeared damage might not extend beyond the homes and businesses that took on water Friday. Ofcials warned against overcondence until the river fell enough to take the pressure off levees. The National Weather Service projected the river would decline 2 feet by midweek. The Picards stood on a bridge overlooking the swollen river, straining for a glimpse of their house in a distant cul-de-sac. It appeared water was knee-deep on the main oor. The couple was staying with relatives in the area but said they were determined to return home. After the water recedes, theyll pump the basement dry, tear out drywall and insulation and make needed repairs. State lawmakers will probably consider offering f lood relief during a special session this fall. They have $386 million in a rainy-day fund, as well as another $136 million in a school-aid fund that could be diverted to the many communities touched by oodwaters this year. Both funds are fattened by state oil revenues. I think were going to look at Bismarck, Minot, the whole statewide ooding issue, and look at them all together, said Senate Majority Leader Bob Stenehjem, a Republican from Bismarck. When it comes to paying for rebuilding, FEMA has approved individual assistance for Burleigh (home to the capital of Bismarck) and Ward counties, where Minot is located. Gov. Jack Dalrymple is pushing to expand it to 20 other counties and the Turtle Mountain Chippewa and Spirit Lake Sioux reservations. We know that we have a tremendous recovery effort coming, and even as we talk about how to beat this water back over the next few days, we have already started talking about how the recovery will be managed and organized, the governor said. The FEMA assistance is capped at a little more than $30,000, but Sen. Kent Conrad, a North Dakota Democrat, said a more realistic gure is $7,000 to $8,000 the typical amounts provided to victims of severe ooding in Nashville, Tenn., a year ago. FEMA and the federal Small Business Administration will offer loan and grant programs, too. The Bank of North Dakota, the nations only state-owned bank, already offers low-interest loans up to $500,000 to business people, farmers and ranchers living in areas that the president has declared a disaster area. The bank and the states Public Finance Authority also have made low-interest loans available to local governments while they wait to collect expected federal aid after they make repairs on their public works.

Associated Press

Debris oats up to a home for sale from the Souris River ood waters in the Minot, N.D., neighborhood of Oak Park on Saturday.
Eric Hardmeyer, the Bank of North Dakotas president, said the bank learned valuable lessons about administering disaster aid from the epic Red River Valley f loods of 1997, which swamped the city of Grand Forks, knocked out its sewer and water systems and forced the evacuation of more than 50,000 people. We found that we needed to let the federal programs get in and do their business before we found out where we should play, Hardmeyer said. Their pockets are deeper, and theyre more experienced at that than we are. Pat Owens, who was mayor of Grand Forks when the ood hit in April 1997, said federal agencies were critical to the citys recovery. They set up a one-stop shop for aid programs in Grand Forks Civic Auditorium. That was a salvation, Owens told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Sunday. People would not know how to even begin trying to bring their lives back, and that gave them a place to go. Les Younger, a retired Air Force veteran who maintained aircraft weapons systems at Minot Air Force Base, and his wife, Jacque, a seamstress, said they did not buy ood insurance because they thought their home was far enough from the river. Jacque Younger said the couples recovery is going to be very tough, because we dont have a lot of savings. But they tried to put the best face on it by thinking of how they might change things in rebuilding. You have to look on the bright side, because if you look on the dull side, it gets you down, Jacque Younger said.

Night Classes?

Senegalese youths burn bar and Jehovahs Witness temple


Associated Press
DAKAR, Senegal Hundreds of Muslim protesters descended on a Jehovahs Witness temple and a bar in a conservative Muslim neighborhood of the Senegalese capital on Sunday, setting the buildings on fire in a rare instance of religious extremism in this normally moderate Islamic republic. Thierno Mbeugne, spokesman for the local imam association, said the head imam in the conservative Yoff district of Dakar had asked the youth to march on Sunday against what they considered as acts of aggression against their faith. They were targeting the temple because they claim its members were proselytizing, and the bar because it was selling alcohol. He said the Islamic religious leaders did not endorse the violence, but they do think that the youth were right to destroy the church and the bar. One of the rioters, Mame Faye, 24, explained that the mob set upon the temple while churchgoers were praying inside before setting upon the bar. Other witnesses, however, said that the hundreds of protesters burst into the establishment and began drinking the cans of beer. They then stripped the building, making off with the refrigerator, the air conditioners and the furniture. Then they set it on fire. A doctor who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press said his clinic had treated 37 people, including several wounded police officers. One had a stab wound. The police used tear gas to disperse the crowd. Mbeugne claimed that the head of the temple had been actively trying to convert locals. He said that under the cover of teaching English, she had started handing out crosses and Jehovahs Witness literature.

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The Daily Universe, Monday, June 27, 2011

Photo by Luke Hansen

Photo by Stephanie Rhodes

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, with his wife Ann, speaks to a crowd from the back of a pick-up truck at Hires Big H in Salt Lake City on Friday.

Jazz assistant coach Jeff Hornacek, left, and 2011 draft pick Alec Burks put their hands in for a cheer with local youth at a basketball clinic in Salt Lake City on Saturday morning.

JAZZ
Rookies work with youth
Continued from Page 1 Not too many kids get to do this, 11-year-old Luisa added. The event also had special signicance for Corbin. I grew up in the Boys and Girls Club in South Carolina, Corbin said. Its a great feeling to now be a part of the Jazz organization and have an opportunity to give back to that group. Its just fun to see [the kids] having fun doing something thats good for them. Kanters enthusiasm was recognizable as he gave out high ves to the children as they completed the drills. I love being around kids, Kanter said. After my bas-

ROMNEY
Candidate visits SLC
Continued from Page 1 Shortly after Romneys arrival, he spoke from the back of an American-made truck with American ags ying in the background. Romney delivered his standard stump speech, speaking about patriotism, the economy and the challenges Americans face. Meggie Winn, 25, from Salt Lake City, was excited to see Romney, a BYU graduate, in person. Mitt is a popular candidate in Utah particularly, and I have friends who are big supporters, Winn said. Im impressed with Mitt Romney in general, and so I wanted to see him and what he had to say. I had never been to a political rally at this type of level so it was something interesting to be involved in. After speaking to a crowd outside, Romney went inside

ketball career I want to do something like this. Its just so much fun, and it makes me so happy. After a busy few days because of the NBA Draft, Burks said it was nice to just blow off some steam. Theyve got a lot of energy, like myself, Burks said. The participants were given a peek behind the scenes with a tour of the locker room, as well as an opportunity to ask questions and take photos in the pressroom, where gifts, including Jazz swag, awaited them. Opening it up for a mock press conference, Corbin faced a motley sequence of questions from the young basketball enthusiasts, some drawing amused laughter from the adults in the room: Who is your favorite player on the Jazz? Do the Lakers cheat? Did you ever want to play for the Jazz? Others sounded oddly

like those the media have been asking lately. Was Jimmer an option in the draft? asked one teenager. He was, Corbin answered. But we had the 12th pick and he went 10th. It was great to see him go earlier and be rewarded with a higher pick because he worked really hard. I think hell do well in this league because he can really score. Megan Shaw, Juniors Program director for the Boys and Girls Club in Murray, said the unique experience was one she hoped would stick with the youth. Most of these kids have never even been to a game, but they have a love and passion for basketball, Shaw said. What they were able to do today was an amazing, once in a lifetime opportunity that truly lets them see the reality of it. If this is their dream then its a possibility for them, if they work hard enough.

SHOrT
Do tall people get all the luck?
Continued from Page 1 Research shows the bias against short people continues throughout adulthood, especially when it comes to jobs. In a collaborative message from professors in BYUs Organizational Leadership and Strategy Department, they said there is definitely bias against short people in the workforce. David Cherrington, professor of organizational behavior, said discrimination has been documented for almost a century. One of the early articles I remember reading was about the height advantage of life insurance salesmen, Cherrington said. Taller salesmen are more successful and better leaders. Recently, there was a study on what was called the Height advantage. The report said that there is a $2,000 per inch advantage in the starting salaries of business school graduates. Assistant professor Katie Liljenquist said short bias can be seen from the styles in history. My short, bald and brilliant adviser in grad school used to joke about how he succeeded in spite of himself, Liljenquist said. We may giggle at the image of past generations of men parading around in heels, but as we learn more about the inuence of height on a myriad of personal outcomes, it seems that men sporting pumps were more than fashionistas. Associate professor Michael Thompson gave further evi-

dence that proves discrimination against short people in the workforce. Research suggests that someone who is 6 feet tall earns, on average, nearly $166,000 more during a 30-year career than someone who is 5 feet 5 inches even when controlling for gender, age and weight, Thompson said. Jones said she has seen a slight bias in past jobs. She said every job shes ever applied to, she has had a male boss who hires small, unobtrusive women like her because they will do what he tells them. Besides job discrimination, short people have to endure lifelong ghts with the daily things most people take for granted. Food is hard because if you put on any weight you look a lot chubbier because it has nowhere to go, Jones said. If I gained 10 pounds and my 6-feet tall friend gained 10 pounds, its a very different thing. And to lose weight is difcult because you have to basically have zero fat on your body. You have to be really skinny or you look chubby. And what about dating? Well, that depends on gender. Both Jones and Hogg have dated someone that was 6 feet 2 inches tall. While Jones had no problem with dating a taller guy, Hogg said the experience with a taller girl was interesting. Yeah, it was awkward standing up and kissing her because I had to awkwardly move my head up, Hogg said with a laugh. Girls like tall guys. Short guys are cute like old men and puppies are cute. Given, nowadays there are more and more couples where the female is taller than the male. Jena Pratt, 19, a sophomore

Hires Big H, a restaurant that he used to frequent with his family when he worked on the Salt Lake Olympic Organizing Committee. Waiting for him were members of the business community who wanted to express concerns with the current administrations policies. Joe Reyna, president and CEO of the Viva! market retail chain, spoke to Romney about his concern for consumers. I told Romney, when you become president please help the consumers, Reyna said. The average consumer is having a hard time nding a job. They dont have money to spend. If you have consumers, you have businesses. Romney sought to calm those concerns. The challenge is there are some people who think the best way to balance the budget is by raising taxes on the American people, Romney said. That will slow down the growth of the economy and keep people from starting businesses and growing businesses, and that is a self-defeating proposition. Most of the business people who spoke to Romney were concerned about government

regulation and taxes, which they said are preventing their businesses from growing. Holly Richardson, a Utah House representative for District 57 and political blogger, expressed her concerns to Romney. My concerns that Ive seen are really 10th Amendment issues, Richardson said. Having the federal government impose their restraints, but financially tying our hands, then mandating that we take care of whatever it is the federal government decides we take care of. Were ready for [the federal government] to back off a little bit. Mark Hale, whose father founded Hires Big H, was honored that Romney chose his familys restaurant to address the concerns of the community. He was unbelievably gracious to me and to everybody he met, Hale said. He is a real person. Hes had a ton of experience in the business world. In the end, our government needs to be run like a business to be successful. If it is, it will be successful. If its not, it turns out to be the situation were now in.

APP
Deseret Book has free app
Continued from Page 1 We now have the capacity to publish books that can literally be accessed anywhere in the world in a matter of moments, said Sheri Dew, president and CEO of Deseret Book, in a news release. This is a remarkable era for publishers when content can be made readily available in whatever format suits your personal tastes. Kevin Johnson, 26, a senior studying computer science, said he prefers browsing LDS scriptures on a previously dow n loaded, t hi rd-pa r t y scripture app.

Photo by Luke Hansen

Some studies have shown shorter people earn less money than tall people.
studying anthropology, said she loves shorter guys. At 5-foot-7, she said the shortest shes gotten to date was a man three inches shorter than her. I think short guys are extremely attractive, Pratt said. Jones said the major advantage to being tall is simply that you feel normal. According to her, there are absolutely no disadvantages to being tall. I have a couple of girlfriends that are 6 feet tall and they like it, Jones said. I have amazon friends, and they would wear heels and be freakishly tall, and they thought it was cool. Katherine Newkirk, 20, a junior majoring in international relations, is 6-foot-2. She thinks being short and tall both have challenges but how to deal with these prejudices depends on attitude. Shortness could be seen connected with a disability, even though its not, just like being freakishly tall could be connected with a disability, she said. You are who you are and you should be proud of it.

I will probably not replace my other scripture app; I havent seen anything here that is so much better than my other app, but it all seems to be on par, he said. Their cross references are pretty good, and navigating between chapters is really easy. Unlike the Gospel Library app, the Bookshelf allows users to search and link to scriptures from their entire library. Bookshelf is the only app on the market that offers instant full-text search of your entire library, said Matt McBride, digital product director for Deseret Book. It makes finding favorite quotes and passages much easier. Bookshelf also includes a copy of the scriptures so you can simply tap and read the verses cited in other books. The application is custom-

izable to users, allowing for bookmarks, links to scriptures and customization of e-book titles. In addition to searching and using copy/ paste functions, users can navigate their digital library with content jumping and a linked table of contents. Deseret Book is planning on releasing free upgrades that include highlighting and note-taking capabilities. Deseret Book has other digital offerings and is currently preparing the release of several other apps. Future releases include an app based on the popular board game Feast and Famine, and a series of Book of Mormon games for young children. Users can download Deseret Book-published apps on the iTunes app store. Visit DeseretBookshelf.com for more information and to see frequently asked questions.

4 The Daily Universe, Monday, June 27, 2011

HBLL exhibit displays ancient documents


B y S C O tt B L I C K F E L dt
In todays information age, people thrive daily on different kinds of documentation from diaries to bank accounts, and social media from Facebook to Twitter. But information was no less valuable in ancient cultures. The Harold B. Lee Library continues its 50th Anniversary celebration with a fourth exhibit containing ancient documents, several of which are from ancient Egypt and Greece. The exhibit, located in the exhibition room near the main entrance, will be available through Aug. 12. Roger Macfarlane, professor of classics and comparative literature, compared the importance of information between ancient and modern society. Documents have been kept for a long time really for the same reasons we keep them, Macfarlane said. We have writing in ancient Greek recording the size of a persons landholding. We write down contracts today, wills, letters to our friends, all those things were written down in the ancient world as well. While we face issues today in our society such as identity theft and illegal immigration, documentation for identity was important anciently as well. Robert Maxwell is the chair of special collections cataloging and metadata, and drew parallels between the importance of documented identity. They needed to prove their citizenship, Maxwell said. For instance, you know the story of Apollo, saying Im a Roman citizen, why are you treating me this way? Instantly, they changed the way that they were behaving toward him, and he would have had documents to prove that. Citizenry meant privileges for people in ancient times, the same way drivers licenses, college degrees and other certications grant privileges for people today. Roger Layton, Harold B. Lee Library communications manager, has been involved with this exhibit and several in the past. The ancient documents exhibit is the fourth of seven rotating exhibits during the 50th Anniversary celebration. Past ones and the current one are also an indication of exhibits to come. We are going to have seven different exhibits come through this year, Layton said. I did an exhibit on artifacts, things you cant check out: guns, swords, hippo teeth, all sorts of things like that which come in different collections and they are just too cool to get rid of so we keep them. Layton said visitors to the exhibit have found the display interesting. We are just starting to get the word out on it, Layton said. But when we have been upstairs setting things up or adjusting lights, everyone who walks through loves it. There are things in there that are almost 2,000 years old. I think this is going to be one of the most popular exhibits that we have had in a very long time. Layton was asked how this exhibit compared to others in the past. Each one has had its own avor, Layton said. This one goes right to the core of scholarly research, these are things that are actively being used by scholars who are publishing. This is a great example of what goes on at BYU in terms of our best scholarship.

Photo by Stephanie Rhodes

The Harold B. Lee Library continues its 50th Anniversary celebration with a fourth exhibit containing ancient documents in the exhibition room near the entrance of the library.

Company of Thieves still looking for its own sound


By COuRt MANN
You almost fooled me when you said/just sell your soul for someones gold/maybe then youll have a friend. So sings Genevieve Schatz on Company of Thieves new single, Death of Communication. At this point in the Chicago bands career, no lyric could be more applicable. Schatz and her bandmates gained mild notoriety on their rst release, 2009s Ordinary Riches, delivering stellar performances on Last Call with Carson Daly and Live from Daryls House, a concert show hosted by Daryl Hall (of Hall and Oates fame). But it was clearly just a start. Ordinary Riches was full of expertly crafted pop-rock, but contained average performances that belied their live shows. Listening to it, one couldnt help but think Company of Thieves could put out better recordingsthe next time around. With their new album, Running from a Gamble, they have. The sophomore effort delivers much more condent performances and stronger production. The selfassured power-pop of Death of Communication treads Paramore territory, and will likely snatch a hefty portion of Paramore fans. But Company of Thieves isnt much like that band, other than a pint-sized female singer with explosive pipes and they should be careful to avoid mimicry going forward. Misleading singles have created many a one-hit wonder. Company of Thieves are at their best when theyre playful,dance-able and hopeful. They nail all of the above on Tallulah, a neo-soul jam that somehow conjures both Cee Lo Green and Fiona Apple. But these lighthearted moments are few and far between on Running from a Gamble.Instead, there are a lot of slow-burners. Some, like the smoldering Gorgeous/ Grotesque, are excellent. But there are too many of them,

MusicMondays
Artist: Company of Thieves Album: Running from a Gamble Grade: B

Photo by Stephanie Rhodes

BYU seniors Nick Taylor and Tiffany Browning eat outside the newly opened The Awful Wafe restaurant on 700 East in Provo.

The Awful Waffle brings Belgium to Provo


B y Amb E R D I C K s O N
Sweet smells of Belgian street carts drifted through the Provo air as many lined up for a taste of authentic Belgian wafes. The Awful Waff le, a new student-owned restaurant located at 815 N. 700 East, had its grand opening event Friday. The shop specializes in Belgian wafes and crepes, and features a 150-year-old Belgian wafe recipe made with sugar pearls in yeast dough. Husband and wife Lance and Ashley Wakeeld decided to open the restaurant because Lance served an LDS mission in Belgium and France and loved the food there, and wanted to serve gourmet food at affordable prices. To accomplish this goal, the couple did an internship in Brussels for three months and collected recipes and machinery used for making wafes and crepes. Many may wonder why the couple wouldchoose to name their business Awful. Ashley Wakeeldsaid choosing the name was a journey. We started out with a simple, classy French name, but it wasnt sitting well with us, she said. We wanted a conversation piece for our name, as well as a name that would be almost impossible to forget, athough clearly, we dont think our wafes are awful. Provo Mayor John Curtis had a chance to stop by opening day and said he liked the new restaurant. This is the real deal, he said on his blog. Recipes and equipment all from Belgium. Make sure you check out the wafe grill that Lance carried on his back on the Belgium metro. I let them order for me and I was served the best crepe Ive ever had.I give it four stars and wish them the best. Belgian wafes and crepes seem to be an emerging trend in restaurants. Quick and inexpensive, with French cachet but not French snobbery, said Brent Thorn about crepes in Nations Restaurant News Magazine. These thin, versatile pancakes can be savory or sweet, hand-held or eaten with a knife and fork, and served for breakfast, lunch, dinner or a snack. The grand opening attracted so much business that by the end of the night, The Awful Wafe had run out of supplies and some were sent home wafe-less. We found an incredible location so everything just seemed to fall into place, Wakeeld said of the shop, located just south of BYU campus. We couldnt not do it.

creating a lopsided, laborious album that might not promote Company of Thieves the way they would prefer. If Running from a Gamble reveals anything, its that Company of Thieves is still discovering its own sound. The band probably wont ever sell its soul for someones gold it just hasnt found what that soul sounds like yet.

Prankster warns drivers of zombies on Kentucky highway


Associated Press
FLORENCE, Ky. The zombie menace has once again found its way onto a highway sign. After pranksters switched the message on an electronic road sign, motorists in nor thern Kentucky were warned this week to watch for zombies along the Interstate 71-75 corridor. The usual message about upcoming roadwork was changed to: Nightly lane closures, zombies ahead. Kentucky Transportation Cabinet spokeswoman Nancy Wood said the Transportation Cabinet learned about the new message midmorning Thursday and turned it off until it can be xed. Wood said ofcials are not amused by the prank. The gag was hardly original. There was a spate of such pranks in 2009 in Florida, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Illinois and Texas. Last March, someone posted a zombie warning on a highway sign in South Carolina.

Cinnamon Tree BYU grads create popular GPS app


By GAbE GuERRERO
iPhone apps are a dime a dozen. However, a group of BYU graduates have set their GPS app apart, as it was recently featured on Time Magazines website. GPS devices have stormed technology platforms. Common in vehicles, computers and smart phones, GPS technology is a necessity for many. That was the niche the executives of Garafa iOS Development, formed by BYU g r adu ate s, ne e de d when they launched their first app called GPS Kit, which was recently featured in Time. coms Fathers Day special. Spencer Smit h, a BY U graduate, CFO and senior engineer of Garafa, was sur-

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prised when finding out they had made it to Time.com. We had no idea we were mentioned, Smith said. We had a user call us about halfway through the day the article was out. Technology blogger Chris Gayomali from Time.comselected GPS Kit as a top 15 app for Fathers Day. A customer delivered the news after calling Garafas tech line. Smith said being featured i n nationa l plat for ms is anenormoustriumph for their GPS app. We saw a spike in sales, the highest in one year, Smith said. This national recognition landed the executives from Garafa an interview by The Browser, a KSL-produced radio show. Garafa has created more than 40 apps. After Apple launched the first App Store

e had no idea we were mentioned [on Time.com]. We had a user call us about halfway through the day the article was out.
CFO and senior engineer of Garafe

Spencer Smith

in 2008, Garafas founders decided to venture in with GPS Kit. It made $4,500 in a single day. Jonathan Lund, BYUgraduate, CEO and senior engineer, said this experience gave them confidence going forward. It was eye-opening and we

realized this can actually be a career path, Lund said. W hat g rabbed nationa l at tention wa s how GP S Kit comes equipped with Squawk. Live tracking whereabouts and communicating with others in real time is Squawks main feature. It was this feature, along with accurate weather station information and personalized maps, that propelled GPS Kit above the rest. JoeWilson, a BYU graduate, is Garafas CCO and interaction/art director. He said Garafa never intended to only hire BYUgraduates. In looking for qualified individuals, it has been pure coincidence that so far only BY U graduates have been selected, Wilson said. We think this speaks very highly of BYU and the caliber of graduates it produces.

The Daily Universe, Monday, June 27, 2011

Yankee spirit comes to the MOA


B y D I A N E L E F R A N dt
American art is coming to BYU in a never before seen exhibit that focuses on American history. The Yankee Spirit: Highlights from the New Britain Museum of American Art debuts a whos who collection of American painters from the 16th to the 21st centuries, including notables such as Winslow Homer, Georgia OKeeffe and Norman Rockwell. The paintings come courtesy of The New Britain Museum of Art, which is dedicated to American art. Our masterpieces are considered a preeminent collection, said Claudia Thesing, NBMAA director of development. Its a great opportunity to view a body of solely American art. The highlights included in the MOAs new exhibition have been released just once before. The first release was seven years ago to the Terra Museum of American Art in Chicago. We are very pleased to have the exhibition go to Utah, said Douglas Hyland, director and curator of NBMAA. The collection exhibits the Yankee spirit of independence and democracy. All the paintings in the featured in this show are those who helped to propagate the idea of New England as a symbol for America, said Danielle Hurd, graduate student curator of the exhibition. However, as infusions of immigrants changed the ethnic make-up of New England and the nations borders pushed westward, it became apparent that American culture was also changing. The Yankee Spirit exhibit is divided into three mai n sections : Yankees, Town and Country and Ports of Exchange. The MOA hopes patrons will be able to experience through masterpieces of American painting what it means to be a Yankee, how city and country life were key components to American settlements in New England, as well as New Englands European heritage and Enlightenment ideals. The Museum of Art will host an exhibition preview on Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. as part of the 2011 Americas Freedom Festival. Participants will be treated to entertainment and light refreshments. The public is invited to attend and admission is free. The exhibit runs Thursdays through Saturdays until Oct. 9. More information is available by visiting moa.byu.edu.

Photo courtesy of Brigham Young University Museum of Art

West Rock, by Frederic Church, pays tribute to two English judges who were kept hidden by American colonists after they signed the death warrant of King Charles I. West Rock is one of 59 masterpieces included in the newest Museum of Art exhibit, The Yankee Spirit.
exhibition were created in New England and New York and convey regional perspectives from the cradle of American civilization. The Yankee identity was molded and shaped over time as immigration and westward expansion impacted American settlement life, according to a news release. In large part, the artists

Bill introduced to end federal ban on marijuana


By MARk LARsON
Legislation was introduced Thursday that proposes ending federal prohibition on marijuana. The bill, introduced by Reps. Barney Frank, D-Mass., and Ron Paul, R-Texas, would allow states to legalize, regulate, tax and control marijuana without federal interference. We think this is an issue states can handle, Frank said in a tele-press conference Thursday. The federal focus on marijuana is a significant

he federal focus on marijuana is a signicant waste of scarce federal resources.


Co-introduced bill to end federal ban on marijuana use
waste of scarce federal resources. Responsible adults can choose, just like alcohol

Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass

or tobacco, how they want to use it. The proposed bill would not directly legalize recreational marijuana use, but it would give power to individual states to determine how marijuana use should be regulated. The bill would continue to give power to the federal government to enforce state marijuana laws, but when no state law exists, the federal government would have no power. Those introducing the bill said it would eliminate the debate between state and federal powers and actually help

to reduce marijuana use. This legislation would help keep marijuana out of the hands of kids, something our current situation isnt doing, said Rep. Jared Polis, D-Colo. This past year, California rejected Proposition 19, which would have allowed for recreational marijuana use within the state. Colorado and Washington may have similar votes this year. Advocacy groups are active on both sides of the debate. The Marijuana Policy Project, an advocacy group for marijuana legalization, was

a major force behind the creation of the bill. It benefits all states, and allows states to experiment with what works best for them, said Morgan Fox, communications manager for the Marijuana Policy Project. He also said it would have no impact on states like Utah that are not likely to legalize marijuana. Other organizations, like the Drug Free America Foundation Inc., have played an active role in opposing the legalization of marijuana, using the previous Supreme Court ruling as the basis for

their argument. No matter what laws are passed locally or statewide, marijuana is illegal on the federal level a ruling upheld by the Supreme Court and enforced by federal officials, said Drug Free America on its website. Although the conversation has been fueled by this announcement, even proponents of the bill recognize the unlikelihood of the bill passing. I dont expect this bill to pass, Frank said. But this is an educational process. I believe the public is ahead of Congress on this.

Gender neutral preschool


Associated Press
STOCKHOLM At the Egalia preschool, staff avoid using words like him or her and address the 33 kids as friends rather than girls and boys. From the color and placement of toys to the choice of books, every detail has been carefully planned to make sure the children dont fall into gender stereotypes. Society expects girls to be girlie, nice and pretty and boys to be manly, rough and outgoing, says Jenny Johnsson, a 31-yearold teacher. Egalia gives them a fantastic opportunity to be whoever they want to be. The taxpayer-funded preschool which opened last year in the liberal Sodermalm district of Stockholm for kids aged 1 to 6 is among the most radical examples of Swedens efforts to engineer equality between the sexes from childhood onward. Breaking down gender roles is a core mission in the national curriculum for preschools, underpinned by the theory that even in highly egalitarian-minded Sweden, society gives boys an unfair edge. To even things out, many preschools have hired gender pedagogues to help staff identify language and behavior that risk reinforcing stereotypes. Some parents worry things have gone too far. An obsession with obliterating gender roles, they say, could make the children confused and ill-prepared to face the world outside kindergarten. Different gender roles arent problematic as long as they are equally valued, says Tanja Bergkvist, a 37-year-old blogger and a leading voice against what she calls gender madness in Sweden. Those bent on shattering gender roles say theres a hierarchy where everything that boys do is given higher value, but I wonder who decides that it has higher value, she says. Why is there higher value in playing with cars? At Egalia the title connotes equality boys and girls play together with a toy kitchen, waving plastic utensils and pretending to cook. One boy hides inside the toy stove, his head popping out through a hole. Lego bricks and other building blocks are intentionally placed next to the kitchen, to make sure the children draw no mental barriers between cooking and construction. Director Lotta Rajalin notes that Egalia places a special emphasis on fostering an environment tolerant of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people. From a bookcase, she pulls out a story about two male giraffes who are sad to be childless until they come across an abandoned crocodile egg. Nearly all the childrens books deal with homosexual couples, single parents or adopted children. There are no Snow White, Cinderella or other classic fairy tales seen as cementing stereotypes. Rajalin, 52, says the staff also try to help the children discover new ideas when they play. A concrete example could be when theyre playing house and the role of the mom already is taken and they start to squabble, she says. Then we suggest two moms or three moms and so on. The schools methods are controversial; some say they amount to mind control. Rajalin says the staff have received threats from racists apparently upset about the preschools use of black dolls. But she says that theres a long waiting list for admission to Egalia, and that only one couple has pulled a child out of the school. Jukka Korpi, 44, says he and his wife chose Egalia to give our children all the possibilities based on who they are and not on their gender. Sweden has promoted womens rights for decades, and more recently was a pioneer among European countries in allowing gay and lesbian couples to legalize their partnerships and adopt children. Gender studies permeate academic life in Sweden. Bergkvist noted on her blog that the statefunded Swedish Science Council had granted $80,000 for a postdoctoral fellowship aimed at analyzing the trumpet as a symbol of gender. Jay Belsky, a child psychologist at the University of California, Davis, said hes not aware of any other school like Egalia, and he questioned whether it was the right way to go. The kind of things that boys like to do run around and turn sticks into swords will soon be disapproved of, he said. So gender neutrality at its worst is emasculating maleness. Egalia is unusual even for Sweden. Staff try to shed masculine and feminine references from their speech, including the pronouns him or her han or hon in Swedish. Instead, theyve have adopted the genderless hen, a word that doesnt exist in Swedish but is used in some feminist and gay circles.

UNIVERSITY DEVOTIONAL Tuesday, June 28, 11:05 a.m., de Jong Concert Hall

This devotional will also be broadcast in the JSB Auditorium and F-201 HFAC.

Kent P . Jackson is a professor of ancient scripture at Brigham From the color and placeYoung University. He has a BA ment of toys to the choice in ancient studies from BYU and MA and PhD degrees in ancient Near Eastern studies from the University of Michigan. He joined the BYU faculty in 1980. Professor Jackson is a former chair of Near Eastern Studies at BYU, former associate dean of Religion, and former associate director of the BYU Jerusalem Center for Near Eastern Studies.

STOCKHOLM (AP) At the "Egalia" preschool, staff avoid using words like "him" or "her" and P. Jackson address the 33 kidsKent as Professor of Ancient Scripture "friends" rather than girls and boys.

His research interests include Latter-day Saint scripture, doctrine, and history, as well as biblical and Near Eastern topics. His recent books include Joseph Smith, the Prophet and Seer, Joseph Smiths Commentary on the Bible, and The Book of Moses and the Joseph Smith Translation Manuscripts. Professor Jackson is married with ve children and nine grandchildren. He and his wife, Nancy, live in Orem, Utah.

Selected speeches available at http://speeches.byu.edu

6 The Daily Universe, Monday, June 27, 2011

A Crusader town emerges under an old Israeli port


Associated Press
ACRE, Israel Off the track beaten by most Holy Land tourists lies one of the richest archaeological sites in a country full of them: the walled port of Acre, where the busy alleys of an Ottomanera town cover a uniquely intact Crusader city now being rediscovered. Preparing to open a new subterranean section to the public, workers cleaned stones this week in an arched passageway underground. Etched in plaster on one wall was a coat of arms graffiti left by a medieval traveler. Nearby was a main street of cobblestones and a row of shops that once sold clay gurines and ampules for holy water, popular souvenirs for pilgrims. All were last used by residents in 1291, the year a Muslim army from Egypt defeated Acres Christian garrison and leveled its remains. The existing city, built by the Ottoman Turks around 1750, effectively preserved this earlier town, which had been hidden for centuries under the rubble. Its like Pompeii of Roman times its a complete city, said Eliezer Stern, the Israeli archaeologist in charge of Acre. He called the town one of the most exciting sites in the world of archaeology. The newly excavated area, part of a Crusader neighborhood, is set to open later this year. Today, old Acre is a picturesque enclave jutting into the Mediterranean, home to 5,000 Arab citizens of Israel who live in dense warrens of homes that are themselves historic artifacts. Most residents are poor. On a recent afternoon, a smattering of tourists walked

Ziggy Peanuts

Non Sequiter

Associated Press

Workers in a section of the Crusader town underneath the old port city of Acre on the Mediterranean coast in northern Israel.
through the old market, while at a sleepy shing dock one boats radio blared Katy Perry. In 2001, Acre became Israels first UNESCO World Heritage site. But whether because of its out-of-the-way location in the countrys north or simply because it must compete with better-known sites like Jerusalem and the desert fortress of Masada, Acre has been overshadowed. Jerusalem, for example, attracted an estimated 2.5 million foreign tourists last year, according to the Tourism Ministry. In contrast, during the same period, Acres historic sites had 444,000 paying visitors Israeli and foreign according to the Acre Municipality. Old Acre has just one hotel with a total of 16 rooms. Acre has existed for at least 4,500 years, but reached the height of its importance with the Crusader conquest in 1104. Under Christian rule, the city became an unruly trading hub home to combative orders of soldier-monks, European factions that distrusted each other and sometimes fought in the streets, competing merchants from cities like Genoa, Venice and Pisa, and small populations of Jews and Muslims, all sharing an enclosed area that at its height was barely the size of two football elds. A French bishop, Jacques de Vitry, reached Acre after a perilous sea journey in 1216. He was appalled. When I entered this horrible city and found it full of countless disgraceful acts and evil deeds, I was very confused in my mind, he wrote in a letter home. Acre, he found, was totally depraved. Murders took place constantly, the town was lled with prostitutes, and residents many of whom he believed to be outlaws who had ed their own lands were utterly devoted to pleasures of the esh. Acre was like a monster or a beast having nine heads, each ghting the other, the bishop wrote. Israeli excavations got under way in earnest in the 1990s, and some remnants of the city that de Vitry knew can already be visited. One is the fortress of the Hospitaller knights, with its pillared dining hall and storerooms, an orderly latrine and a dungeon whose stone walls still have holes for attaching shackles.

Zits Frank & Ernest Dilbert Gareld

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The Hit hopes to be a hit in Orem


By DENEt GRAmPP
Dying is no laughing matter, unless it is the subject of a romantic comedy. The Hit, written by Mike Buckley, opened Thursday at Hale Center Theater Orem. The suspenseful comedy is the story of Susan, a terminally ill woman who hires an assassin to hurry things along so that her younger brother can collect her life insurance payoff and realize his dream of attending Stanford. The incompetent hit man turns out to be a woman on her first job who tips things upside down, creating a scenario that is humorous and entertaining. There is also a love interest that appears, further complicating Susans death wish. According to the theaters website, the production is a zany and heart-warming play about dying and learning to live. The play was originally produced in San Diego and is making its first appearance in Utah with this production. It had great reviews in San Diego, said Sean Murphy, director of marketing communications and development for the theater. Its a fantastic comedic piece. Murphy is hopeful patrons I love that the producers trusted their audiences enough to choose a contemporary, unknown script like The Hit, said Angie Ottosen-Staheli, who plays the lead role of Susan Timmerman. Its fresh, current and the dialogue is very natural. I really think the script will spread around Utah like wildfire. The Hale theater is a unique venue that has developed a loyal following who return year after year. The Hale in Orem is a very intimate setting with theaterin-the-round, giving the audience a unique perspective as the action literally happens all around them, said Jeff Carter, a regular patron of the theater. The costumes, props and effects are very professional for this size of a troupe. Admission prices range from $15.50- $19.50, with a $2 discount for children. The play runs Mondays through Saturdays until July 30, with no performances June 28-29 or July 4-6. Evening performances begin at 7:30 with 3 p.m. Saturday matinees on July 9, 16, 23, 30. HCTO is located at 225 W. 400 North, Orem. For more information visit haletheater.org or call the box office at 801-226-8600.

Associated Press

A bear looks inside a family cabin in Hobble Creek Canyon. With record snowpack in Utahs mountains, bears out looking for food are heading into lower elevations where theyve never been before, raising concerns about human encounters.

Utah snowpack forcing bears to lower elevations

Photo courtesy of Pete Widtfelt

In this photo, Susan, played by Angie Ottosen-Staheli, hides from Slavo, played by Josh Curtis, in The Hit. The Hit opened at Hale Center Theater Orem on Thursday and runs through July 30.
will give the new play a shot. We know its new, but we know it will win their hearts, Murphy said. The plays action takes place in an antique shop with the entire play unfolding in one setting.

Country stars to perform at the SCERA


By DANIELLE NELSON
A promising double-thepleasure, double-the-fun night is in store for country music lovers in Orem. Mark Chesnutt and Mark Wills, well-known singers in the country world, come together tonight at the SCERA Shell Outdoor Theatre for a joint performance at 8. This dynamic duo hits the stage bringing with them the combined forces of 15 No. 1 hits, including favorites such as I Dont Want to Miss a Thing, Its a Little Too Late, I Do (Cherish You) and Wills 19 Something, which topped the charts for two months. The twosome bring a range of country music from twangy treats to country contemporary, and this double feature looks to be a delight for locals. Amber LeBaron, a sophomore studying business, said she appreciates the messages country music offers, including Wills songs. Country music usually focuses on the simple things in life, she said. When it all boils down to it, the simple things, like love and building strong relationships, are what everyone wants in life because that is what makes people happy. Wills said he hopes his music inspires. I think Im a good storyteller to make a song meaningful, Wills said in a news release. Whether romantic or reality, my focus is on the music delivery to make it my own for the people who listen so that they can make it their own. Meaning ful messages arent the only reason locals hope to attend. The lively music is also a draw. I Do really is a great song and has a beautiful message, and Back at One is a song that you have to turn up and sing along with, LeBaron said. Courtney Neves, also a country follower and senior from Otto, Wyo., grew up singing and playing a lot of country songs. I like dancing to country music, Neves said. I spend all my money on tuition and country dancing. Neves said he feels many country songs teach good morals and encourage you to

WHAT Country singers Mark Chesnutt and Mark Wills in concert WhEN Tonight at 8 WHERE SCERA Shell Theatre ADMISSION Tickets run from $12-15
cherish the important things in life. Locals have more than double the reason to attend this performance. With its outside location, attendees can enjoy the summer sun while singing along. General admission tickets are $15 for adults and $12 for children (age 3-11), seniors (age 65-plus) and students (with ID). Tickets may be purchased from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. at the main office of the SCERA Center, 745 S. State, Orem, by calling 801-225-ARTS, online at scera.org or at the gate prior to the concert.

and berries that are staples of a bears diet. If the natural food isnt Associated Press there, bears will go the path SALT LAKE CITY Huge of least resistance and visit snowpack in the Rockies and more garbage cans, said Sierra Nevada isnt only rais- Chris Healy, a spokesman for ing the specter of serious the Nevada Department of f looding downstream, but Wildlife. Healy said in 2010, Nevada its sending bears into lower elevations in search of food officials trapped 78 bears where encounters with hu- the second-most on record since they handled 158 mans could turn deadly. Bears in Utah have been bears in 2007 when drought, showing up in recent weeks hard freeze and hot summer in places they typically arent ruined their natural food seen, poking around cabins source. In 2007 we had bears comnear Strawberry Ridge in the denetgrampp@gmail.com southern part of the state, and ing into downtown Reno, wandering through Ogden Healy said. Theyd be searching for food, coming down Canyon up north. A recent sighting on a state river corridors, maybe under road had Ogden dentist Greg a full moon ... then suddenly the sun comes up and theyre Booth doing a double-take. I told my 10 -year-old in the middle of town. Ofcials in both states say grandson he had seen a big dog, Booth said. But he was the conditions make it even pretty convinced, so I turned more important that people around and the bear was still refrain from feeding bears. A fed bear is a dead bear, there. Utah wildlife ofcials say said Douglas Messerly of bear sightings at lower eleva- Utahs Division of Wildlife tions have been more com- Resources. He suspects someone is mon because of the heavy snowfall the state received feeding a bear that has been this season. Ofcials in Ne- frequenti ng St rawber r y vada are reporting similar Ridge cabins about 20 miles east of Cedar City. bear sightings. Some think its really The bears would prefer to be in meadows higher in the neat to come up for the weekmountains right now, said end, throw it a watermelon Kevin Bunnell of the Utah rind and watch a bear eat it, Division of Wildlife Resourc- Messerly said, adding that es. But the snow has closed it desensitizes the animal to humans, making it a danger. many of those areas off. Ofcials say feeding bears In Nevada, wildlife officials already have had to eu- or leaving garbage out is also thanize three bears because a problem around Lake Tahoe they became safety risks as with a continuous inux of they foraged for food around tourists. We have a new populagarbage cans. One had been living under a ski school for tion every week and its been children, waking up once a a long haul to try to teach week on garbage day to raid those people that theyre putthe cans. Twenty bears were ting bears in danger by feedeuthanized in Nevada for pub- ing them garbage or leaving Photo courtesy of SCERA garbage out, Healy said. Its lic safety reasons last year. Mark Wills, above, will join Ofcials remain hopeful, unfortunate because almost Mark Chesnutt in tonights however, that all the mois- always the bears lose. Healy said bears will be ture in the mountains might concert at the SCERA Theatre. help them avoid a repeat of re- killed any time they break The country singers both have cent summers when drought, into homes in search of food, many hits, including I Dont The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation become aggressive toward followed either bySales an early The New York Times Syndication Corporation Want to Miss a Thing and Its500 Seventh New York, N.Y. 10018 10018 people or are deemed a safety JuneAvenue, freeze New or hot summer, 500 Seventh Avenue, York, N.Y. For Call: 1-800-972-3550 1-800-972-3550 a Little Too Late. stunted growth of the nuts risk. For Information Information Call: For June24, 27,2011 2011 ForRelease ReleaseMonday, Friday, June

Sudoku
8 4 2 3 6 1 7 5 9 1 8 2 4 7 5 9 3 6 1 6 9 5 2 7 4 3 8 3 7 9 8 1 6 4 2 5 5 7 3 8 9 4 1 2 6 4 5 6 3 2 9 1 7 8 9 5 7 6 1 2 3 8 4 5 9 3 1 8 4 7 6 2 3 2 4 9 5 8 6 1 7 6 2 8 9 5 7 3 4 1 6 1 8 7 4 3 2 9 5 7 4 1 2 6 3 8 5 9 2 3 5 4 8 6 9 7 1 2 3 4 6 9 8 5 1 7 4 8 1 2 7 9 5 6 3 9 1 7 5 4 2 6 8 3 7 9 6 1 3 5 8 4 2 8 6 5 7 3 1 2 9 4
8 7 1 2 9 3 4 6 5 3 2 6 5 7 1 8 9 4

Edited by by Will Will Shortz Shortz Edited

No. 0520 0523 No.


9 9 10
10 16 19

5 3 9 4 6 1 2 7 8
6 9 2 1 5 4 3 7 8 4 1 7 8 9 3 5 6 2 5 4 3 6 7 8 2 9 1 8 5 9 6 2 4 1 7 3

2 7 1 9 8 5 6 3 4
1 2 4 5 6 7 8 3 9 6 3 2 7 1 5 9 4 8 7 3 8 9 4 1 5 2 6 5 7 4 3 8 9 2 1 6

8 6 4 2 3 7 5 1 9
9 6 5 3 8 2 7 1 4 1 9 8 4 6 2 7 3 5 4 1 6 7 2 5 9 8 3 9 8 1 2 4 6 3 5 7

7 4 3 6 5 8 9 2 1
2 5 9 8 3 6 1 4 7 7 4 3 1 5 8 6 2 9 3 8 7 4 1 9 6 5 2 2 6 5 9 3 7 4 8 1

9 5 6 1 2 3 8 4 7
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6 1 7 8 9 2 4 5 3
3 6 8 4 5 7 9 2 1 5 4 9 1 2 8 3 7 6

3 8 2 5 1 4 7 9 6
2 7 1 9 6 3 4 5 8 7 3 2 5 8 9 1 6 4

4 9 5 3 7 6 1 8 2
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Puzzle 1: Easy

Puzzle 2: Moderate

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ANSWER ANSWER TO TO PREVIOUS PREVIOUS PUZZLE PUZZLE


O L H U O C H S I N O T S A O T U T R II M E E L

Puzzle 1: Easy

Puzzle 2: Moderate

Solutions to Fridays Puzzles

Puzzle 3: Hard

Puzzle 3: Weekend Warrior (Very Hard)

Monday, June 28, 2011

E I P T V B E O I E N Y N I T M O M C A U P P E L N O H E D D S S ICE M A D Y M P V A B E R E L X L ICE Y B E E L C A R C R E O R A R S O

62 Bo hot (exercise 53 ___ Not so system) 54 Character in I, 63 Able to dance a Claudius jig, say 55 ___ put our 64 Kind oftogether column heads 65 Spot concealed makeup, 56 by Pier 1 alternative maybe 57 Historic 66 Ear features mainframe 67 58 Garbage Bang Bang Orangutang Down actress, 2005 1 Microscope 59 Lets not dopart 2 10 grad anything now, crazy e.g. 60 Pension, in Paris 3 A metronome 61 keeps Duma it disavowal 4 No doubt Down 5 Summer on the 1 Seine TV actress Jennie 6 Thingamajig 2 Peak Statement when 7 of a wave a hand stinks 8 John 3 Loggerheads, 9 Reverse of e.g. WSW 4 1996 10 Achieve through blockbuster with trickery the tagline Dont make plans 11 Bridge handfor August assessment 5 Bamboozled One who may 12 comment on a 13 Back biter? beautiful head shot 18 Amazon and 6 Orinoco, Marsh sound to 7 natives Photographer Cartier-Bresson 23 Pitchfork-shaped 8 letter S.U.V. alternative 25 Shaker ___, O. 9 1978 Daniel 26 Really Patrickticked 27 Pixars Finding Moynihan memoir ___ 10 With She performed 28 37-Down, admirably in the what 17-, 24-, War of 47- and1812 5811 Across Much-performed are all work set in said to bring Nagasaki 29 by 12 Surrounded 2007 American 30 Not niche Idolarunner-up ___ Lewis audience

1 1 14 14 17 17 20 20
23

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5 15

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12 12

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18 18 21 21 24 29
31

22 26 31 33 32 34 33
34

23 22
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24

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28 32 30 38 37 41 38

30 26

35 40 43 46 40

36 35

37 36

39 42 44 39 45
43 51 44

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48 42

49 45 52

50 46

47

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53 52 61 64 67
55 58 61

54

55

56

58 63 66

59 54
57 60

60

Puzzle by by David Steve Levinson Salitan Wilk Puzzle

33 Sturdy, One over par 13 in a way 27 on mate board 34 Left Rams 29 36 Afternoon, Really? in Acapulco 37 Mouth: See 28-Down 30 Prefix 39 Some Smog,folks e.g. are 31 in it for life 40 Supposes to be 32 Govt. grant giver 42 Surfing 20 Questions 33 option, category for short 43 ___ AOLmind alternative 34

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56 ___ Make an 45 Home impression? Baby (1962 Mel hit) ___ 59 Torm Long, long 60 Shoot Babys dinner 46 for wear 48 Smart reaction 61 Command to Fido 49 Coronary ___

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 $1.49 a a minute; minute; or, or, with with a a credit credit card, 1-800-814-5554. 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions subscriptions are are available available for for the the best best of of Sunday Sunday crosswords from the the last last 50 50 years: years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX NYTX to to 386 386 to to download download puzzles, puzzles, or or visit visit nytimes.com/mobilexword nytimes.com/mobilexword for for more more information. information. Online subscriptions: subscriptions: Todays Todays puzzle puzzle and and more more than than 2,000 2,000 past past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 ($39.95 a a year). year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young young solvers: solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

8 The Daily Universe, Monday, June 27, 2011

Mens soccer wins first home game of season


B y N At H A n M I L L E R
The BYU mens soccer team came out hard this past week, winning one of two games and even sending an opposing player off the field on a stretcher. With five yellow cards, four injuries and three goals the mens teams 2-1 home loss was action-packed Thursday night. In the 11th minute of the game, BYU forward Garret Losee crashed the goal and collided with Ventura County goalkeeper Sam Hayden. Losee received a late yellow card following the hit. Hayden rolled on the ground for about 10 minutes before being carried off the field. An ambulance took Hayden to the hospital where he was diagnosed with a concussion and received an MRI. Ventura County forward Jochen Graf volunteered to take Haydens place in goal for the remainder of the game, even though hed never played keeper before. Hayden is a good friend of mine, [so] when they asked who would step up, I had to help my friend, Graf said. Sometimes you have to do what it takes to help the team. Despite having a rookie keeper in the net, the Cougars still struggled to score. They had plenty of opportunities but couldnt finish. In the 81st minute, freshman Winston Sorhaitz scored his first goal in his first college start to tie the game. It was unreal, Sorhaitz said. It felt great to get that first college goal. We just shouldve had more. In the 92nd minute, Ventura Countys Daniel Steres headed the game winner into the net off a corner kick. When asked about the disappointing finish, BYU head coach Chris Watkins said, It was a hard fought game. We played well, I thought we controlled the ball well. We just need to score goals. The team did just that to pull of its first home win of the season Saturday night. The Cougars beat the Los Angeles Legends 3-1. Sorhaitz scored in the eighth minute of the game, and sophomore forward Jace Green scored a rebound goal only five minutes later. We c au g ht t hem of f guard, Watkins said. We could tell that they were a little lackadaisical in warmups and based on our record they werent taking us seriously. In the 42nd minute, junior defender Doug Clark also scored his first goal of the season. After a corner kick bounced past three other BYU players in the box, Clark rocked a shot from 35 yards out that snuck past the keeper and put the Cougars up 3-0. It felt awesome, Clark said. I saw it bouncing toward me and I knew I had it. Late in the first half, BYU was called for a foul in the penalty area that resulted in a penalty kick for the Legends. BYU goalie Cory Cosgrave made an athletic diving stop on Victor Sanchezs shot to end the half. Despite the teams strong defensive efforts during the second half, Los Angeles forward Victor Flores scored the Legends only goal in the 56th minute. Watkins said he was proud of his team and excited to get such a strong win at home. It feels great, Watkins said. Scoring three goals in a win like this really builds condence in a struggling team.

Photo by Stephanie Rhodes

BYU forward Jace Green, 19, scores a goal over fallen Los Angeles Legends players, bringing the score to 2-0 Cougars in the rst half of Saturdays game.

New Jazz players excited to begin careers


B y C H R I S Sc H E I t I n G E R
Enes Kanter and Alec Burks ew into Salt Lake City on Friday eager to begin their careers as the newest members of the Utah Jazz. Jazz President Randy Rigby introduced Kanter and Burks to the local media at a news conference that afternoon. Yesterday was a great day for the Utah Jazz, Rigby said. Were excited that we were able to add two very important components to the future of the Utah Jazz. Kanter and Burks are both 19 and will add additional youth to the Jazz roster, which now features four players who are 21 or younger. Kanter will wear No. 0, and Burks will wear No. 10. Next season marks the rst time head coach Tyrone Corbin will have the opportunity to transition rookies to the professional level. Well, I think its a great marriage. Were all coming into this thing new together, but the expectations are high, Corbin said. We understand that we are probably going to be younger than most teams in a lot of areas, but were going to be prepared, were going to be in shape and were going to be ready to go. Kanter and Burks said they are excited to be a part of the Jazz organization moving forward and are looking to make contributions on the court. Kanter was declared ineligible to play last season with the University of Kentucky due to nancial benets received from

Track stars compete at USA Championships


By KJ PEdERSEn
When it comes to track and eld, junior Miles Batty, senior Chris Little and sophomore Victor Weirich are no strangers to success. After earning NCAA AllAmerican titles several weeks ago, the three Cougars recently faced a new challenge competing at the USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. The USA Championships serve as the selection event of the countrys top athletes for spots on Team USA at the IAAF World Championships later this summer. Athletes will be competing both from colleges and from special athletic teams, such as Nike and Reebok. In other words, the USA Championships are a big deal. As is typical in any national championship, the level of competition was undeniably high. There are a lot more professional runners [here], Batty said. It denitely ups the competition and makes it more difcult to qualify. Batty, a distance runner, has already earned prestigious awards this season. Before being given First-Team All-American honors in his event (1,500 meters) at the NCAA Outdoor Championships, Batty was the NCAA Division I Indoor Champion in the mile. Following Battys race on Thursday, BYU coach Ed Eyestone revealed how good a start Batty had gained on his competitors. Miles ran a good race. He actually led the rst two laps, Eyestone said. He got in a little bit of a box with about 400 [meters] to go, and by the time he got out of the box, he wasnt able to close. Eyestone couldnt say enough about how great a season Batty has had. Hes having an amazing run, no pun intended, he said. This is just a good experience for him, and hell be that much stronger next season. Based on Battys qualifying time, he began the competition seeded sixth in his division. Everyone seeded above him was either on the Nike or the Oregon Track Club Elite team. Batty came close but missed the cut for Saturdays nal race. Everything went pretty according to plan, for the most part, Batty said. It came down to the last 200-300 meters. I was in a poor position to make a move, got boxed in and came up a little short. But its just a good experience to be here. Despite not making it to Saturdays nal round, Batty ran the second-best 1,500-meter time hes ever done, at 3:41.72. Little and Weirich competed in the pole vault. While Batty and Weirich were newcomers to the USA Outdoor Championships, this was Littles second trip in two years. Last year he placed seventh overall. This year, however, was Weirichs time to shine. He gave an exceptional performance, tying for seventh place overall. Two other athletes with connections to BYU also competed in the USA Championships. Former BYU student and 2007 Pan American Games gold medalist Josh McAdams performed in the 3,000-meter steeplechase, and placed fourth overall. BYU graduate student and womens U.S. shot put record holder Jillian CamarenaWilliams achieved second place overall in the shot put competition. Im competing well and Im competing consistent, Camarena-Williams told to the Daily Democrat sports staff. If I can keep this upward trend, I really think I can be contending for [an Olympic] medal. Although the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships marked the end of the regular season, the 2011 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships proved to be an exciting commencement of the post-season. Batty remained optimistic as ever. It was a great season, he said. More importantly, [this season] gave me condence. Ive learned a lot of things that will help me change a little bit for next year and do even better.

Associated Press

Utah Jazz rst round NBA draft picks Enes Kanter, right, and Alec Burks hold up their new jerseys during a news conference at the Zions Bank Basketball Center in Salt Lake City on Friday.
a professional basketball team in Turkey but is excited to play this season. It was tough because I came here [to America] to play college basketball. I came here for education too, Kanter said. It was a little bit frustrating because I couldnt help my team, I couldnt help my coach, I couldnt help my university. Right now Im so happy. I know the Utah Jazz are the right team for me. Kanter is a basketball player rst, but said he would consider becoming a wrestler after his basketball career. His nickname at the University of Kentucky was the UnderKanter, modeled after his favorite professional wrestler the Undertaker. Burks grew up outside of Kansas City and wasnt highly recruited during his senior year of high school. Critics argue he struggles behind the arc, but Burks hit some important 3-pointers while at Colorado. Coming from Kansas City, Mo., I was under-recruited by everybody. It just made the chip on my shoulder even bigger, Burks said. I think that chip on my shoulder just added to the condence on the court. Both Kanter and Burks have fulfilled lifetime dreams by reaching the NBA. Many consider the 2011 Utah Jazz draft to be a success, but the future will only tell. Jazz management and fans alike are looking for a rebound year, after a dismal second half of the season last year. Utah started the rst half of the season with a 27-14 record but lost 29 of its nal 41 games and ultimately missed the playoffs. Its an exciting time for the Utah Jazz franchise, looking at it historically, Jazz CEO Greg Miller said. We have a young team that were working hard to grow and develop into a great young team that will one day win an NBA Championship.

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